Thyroid Profile
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A thyroid profile is a blood test that measures hormones produced by the thyroid gland — a small butterfly-shaped gland in the neck that controls metabolism. Thyroid problems are common, particularly in women, and are easily diagnosed and treated once detected.
Many symptoms — fatigue, weight change, hair loss, low mood, irregular periods, palpitations — can be due to thyroid dysfunction. A simple blood test can settle the question.
A standard thyroid profile measures: TSH (Thyroid Stimulating Hormone — produced by the pituitary gland to control the thyroid), Free T4, and Free T3 (the active hormones produced by the thyroid itself).
When the thyroid is underactive (hypothyroidism), TSH is high and T4 is low. When overactive (hyperthyroidism), TSH is low and T4/T3 are high. Antibody tests — anti-TPO, anti-TG, and TRAb — may be added if autoimmune thyroid disease is suspected
Blood draw 2 to 5 minutes. Batched test.
A small blood sample is taken from a vein in your arm — usually 2 to 5 ml. The whole process is similar to any standard blood test.
Normal TSH is roughly 0.4 to 4.0 mIU/L (with some variation between labs; lower upper limit in pregnancy). Free T4 normal is approximately 0.8 to 1.8 ng/dL. Free T3 normal is approximately 2.3 to 4.2 pg/mL.
Hypothyroidism: high TSH, low or low-normal T4. Hyperthyroidism: low TSH, high T4 or T3. Subclinical patterns (abnormal TSH with normal T4) are common and often need a repeat and a discussion about whether to treat.
This is called subclinical hypothyroidism — the thyroid is being asked to work harder (high TSH) but is still producing enough hormone (normal T4). Whether to treat depends on the TSH level, symptoms, age, pregnancy plans, and antibodies.
Yes. Biotin (vitamin B7), often in cosmetic supplements, can interfere with the lab measurement and falsely change thyroid values — particularly TSH and T4. Stop biotin 3 days before any thyroid test.
Yes. Pregnancy changes thyroid hormone requirements, and the normal ranges are different — particularly TSH, where the upper limit is lower in pregnancy. Untreated thyroid problems can affect the baby; testing matters.
Typically 6 to 8 weeks after any dose change, then yearly once stable. Your doctor will adjust based on your symptoms and TSH.
Stress alone does not cause hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism. It can affect symptoms and may trigger flare-ups of autoimmune thyroid disease in some people. The underlying disease is the issue, not the stress.
Blood test